Cubs World Series title rings doing big business for Jostens

play

SC Featured: The Ring Bearers (6:57)

For 108 years Cubs fans waited, but in 2016 the unthinkable happened as the "lovable losers" became champions. To honor their fans, the Cubs held a contest to make a dream come true for 20 of their most loyal fans: presenting the World Series rings. (6:57)

Chicago Cubs fans continue to prove they can't get enough championship gear -- even the most expensive type.

Jostens started selling World Series champion jewelry, including rings, on April 12, and in the first full week of sales, it sold two times more title jewelry than it had for any other championship team, said Chris Poitras, who heads Jostens' college and sports division.

"The Cubs' championship story was a story that was like nothing else we've ever seen," Poitras said. "And the fans have reacted in a truly special way."

Most of the sales have come from rings, which start at $299 for silver metal and cubic zirconia stones and climb to $10,800 for a white gold ring with 144 diamonds, 55 sapphires and 13 rubies.

Poitras said the most common purchase is the $499 deluxe ring, which comes in 10-karat white gold or sterling silver.

The top fan ring sold by Jostens has 65 to 70 grams of gold compared to the 100 grams of gold on the rings given to the players, making it about 30 percent smaller. Jostens

As of Friday, Jostens had sold all 108 of the $10,800 rings.

"Cubs fans prove to be the best in the game time and time again," said Colin Faulkner, Cubs senior vice president of sales and marketing. "It's no surprise to see such impressive demand for these mementos commemorating our historic World Series championship."

The top fan ring has 65 to 70 grams of gold compared to the 100 grams of gold on the rings given to the players, making it about 30 percent smaller. The high-end fan rings will come in a special box and will be delivered to fans by early June, Poitras said.

Unlike in the past, when Jostens has had pop-up-type shops within team facilities and team stores, Jostens has an actual retail location at the nearby Park at Wrigley, which it has leased from the Cubs ownership's real estate arm, Hickory Street Capital, for a year.

"Having a more traditional environment for the sale of these rings has made a difference," Poitras said.

Once the 108 limited-edition rings are sold out, there might be a strong resale market for those rings, especially if they have a phrase like legendary broadcaster Harry Caray's "Holy cow!" chant on them instead of a person's name.

That's because while the players themselves can sell their rings, employees of the team cannot, or at least not before offering the rings back to the Cubs for $1.

Fans who bought the highest end of rings are not bound by the same provisions.